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The fidelity and indulgence certainly whittles the audience for this down to the dedicated, but those committed fans will find Tasting the Life worth their while. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine. Mighty Baby - Tasting The Life : Live 1971.

The Magic Mixture were one of dozens of psychedelic bands making the rounds of London's rock clubs in 1968, though they were the only ones who recorded an album for Saga Records, a cut-rate classical label who were making a brief foray into pop music.

Mighty Baby’s second and final album sank without trace on its original appearance in late 1971, but has gone on to become one of the best-loved recordings of its time. A Jug Of Love. Ancient Traveller (prev. ).

It can also be a bore, as demonstrated by this 49-minute rarity, comprised of five long, doodling Indian-blues-fusion instrumentals, though some vocal chanting is heard. It might be a cliché when complaining about such albums to whine that it only sounds good if you're stoned, but that axiom does seem to apply to these pieces, any one of which grows tiresome, the effect multiplied when five of them are strung together.

Up for grabs is this CD by Ray Warleigh, which was originally released on vinyl in 1969 and was produced by Scott Walker. On the Sunbeam label, the catalogue number is SBRCD5020 and the date of issue is 2006.

For the most part, these are the artists who were headed down the coffeehouse path when the psychedelic era exploded and left their Martin guitars festooned with paisley shrapnel. While a few of the singing strummers featured here follow a more traditional folk approach, like British guitar giant Wizz Jones' Lazy Farmer and Scottish songbird Mary-Anne, the bulk of Shifting Sands is occupied by the likes of England's Mark Fry and Canadian troubadour Roger Rodier, who sound like they soaked up Bob Dylan and Sunshine Superman-era Donovan in equal amounts.

The first volume of this series, Rain in the Leaves: The EPs, Vol. It's the same deal for this entirely Welsh-sung follow-up compilation, with a dozen of the songs taken from scarce EPs originally issued in 1970 and 1971; a couple others from a rare 1970 single; four others from an unreleased 1970 EP; and a couple others from the 1970 compilation LP Disc a Dawn.

Youngstown, OH's the Human Beinz were one-hit wonders in the United States, their cover of the Isley Brothers' "Nobody But Me" being their only major chart success, but they fared better in Japan, where they topped the charts with their versions of "Hold on Baby" and "Turn on Your Love Light.".

Up for grabs is this CD by Bruce Janaway. On the Sunbeam label, the catalogue number is SBRCD5088 and the date of issue is 2011. NEW, UNPLAYED AND STILL SEALED. Folk / Country / Blues. Odes (A). Odes (B).

A favorite among some collectors of rare late-'60s/early-'70s psychedelic albums, Dragonfly's self-titled LP is a not-so-finely balanced mixture of the sort of overwrought bluesy hard rock by bands of the period like Iron Butterfly with the poppier, more power chord-driven hard rock of the late-'60s Who.

As far as overlooked geniuses of the U.K. psychedelic underground go, the man known as Twink certainly belongs on the shelf alongside Kevin Ayers, Kevin Coyne, Syd Barrett, and Robert Wyatt. As drummer for the Pretty Things and, later, the Deviants, as well as being one-half of Shagrat with Steve Peregrin Took, Twink was integral in the creation of some of the U.K. psychedelic underground's most brilliant artifacts.

Up for grabs is this CD by The Carolyn Hester Coalition. On the Sunbeam label, the catalogue number is SBRCD5067 and the date of issue is 2009. Punk / New Wave / Pub Rock / 80s Mod. NEW, UNPLAYED AND STILL SEALED.